Category: conference

This FOSSASIA was special as it marked its 10th year! It was quite impressive to witness a FOSS conference to continue growing this long with growing community. The four day conference schedule was packed with various interesting talks, workshops, hackathon and other engaging activities.

First day of the conference was single track with some insightful talks. This included speakers who have been long term contributors to FOSSASIA such as Harish Pillay and Hong Phuc. Hong talked about various FOSSASIA initiatives such as Open Tech Summit, Science Hack Day India and events conducted along with HackerSpace SG.

Another interesting talk was from Mitch Altman about the TV-B-Gone project. He started it because he was annoyed by TVs playing loud in public spaces. Little did he know that he wasn’t alone and lot of people wanted the device. Mitch went on to create hardware learning kits and teaches introductory electronics workshops. He motivated a lot of people to go and enjoy making new things.

Another interesting talk was from Huzaifa Sidhpurwala on attacking email encryption and security in general. It was quite interesting to know that the usage of enigmail spiked a lot roughly during 2014 (around the Snowden revelations). The talk also compared S/MIME and OpenPGP approaches to email encryption.

Hardware had a lot of presence at FOSSASIA. There were interesting talks ranging from ARM Development boards to preparing embedded products to be Production ready. From the benchmarks I saw, ARM based devices are getting quite close to their x86 counterparts. Along with ARM64 based servers, the future is bright even for consumer laptops (such as the Pinebook). Also, speaking of the future, we will soon be able to talk to our Coffee Machines! Meanwhile, we do have farmers doing innovative things with Raspberry Pi in Japan 🙂

On last day of conference, I and Sayan talked about Fedora CoreOS and Silverblue respectively. In general I felt that the attendees were quite excited about Fedora CoreOS and the benefits it brings. During Q&A we discussed how the release streams in Fedora CoreOS will be in comparison to Container Linux. Another frequently discussed topic was Podman and benefits of using it over Docker. There was also interest about how CI will operate for Fedora CoreOS. Slides from my talk is available here .

Other than talks, the conference had a lot of activity in the exhibition area as well. We had a CentOS booth (thanks to Rich Bowen!) as well which was very engaging and a place for attendees to ask questions about various Open Source projects from CentOS, Fedora, etc. There was an awesome demo of Open Firmware projects (like Coreboot, U-Boot etc) and how easy it is to flash FOSS firmware in modern laptops using flashrom. To add to that, I even learnt soldering like a pro! Thanks, Mitch.

I must say that conference was filled with wide range of topic and has something interesting to learn for most of the people. Organizers and volunteers has put really hard work in keeping this year conference awesome and engaging, kudos to all!

After attending Flock 2016, I got another chance to be part of Flock conference. This year, it took place in beautiful city Hyannis, Massachusetts, USA from 29th August to 1st September. Schedule of this 4 day conference was designed differently compared to last year. Both workshops and talks were running in parallel for the first three 3 days followed by a wrap-up session on last day.

Flock has lots of talks/workshops that are full of hot topics which are currently happening in Fedora. Being part of Fedora Alternative Architectures group, it is a good place for me to learn and understand about what is new in mainline Fedora. Also, I get to discuss with people to get an overall idea on efforts required to get those features available on different architectures like PowerPC, s390x, ARM.

This year, I attended various talks and workshops on topics related to Project Atomic, Modularity and Fedora CI. Other than that, I co-presented a workshop on Alternative Arches debugging and fixing with Dan Horak.

Keynote!

Day 1 of the conference started with keynote from our Fedora Project Leader, Matthew Miller . Best part of the talk was lots of graphs related to Fedora progress in various aspects. These included number of users using various latest Fedora releases, Fedora contributors activities across time, etc. He highlighted Fedora Atomic CI and Modularity as one of the two current objectives for Fedora.

Talks

Some of the interesting talks I attended were:

Factory 2.0

In this talk Mike Bonnet talked about development around several tools to make a better and stable fedora:

ResultsDB – gets info from autocloud, openqa and taskotron

WaiverDB – waiving a failed result, when we know test is failing incorrectly

Greenwave – correlates data from ResultsDB and WaiverDB

bodhi – enhancement done to incorporate Greenwave result

Freshmaker – triggers rebuilds of content based on events from other services in pipeline like rebuild a module when modulemd or specific file gets updated, rebuild containers when rpm gets to stable

Odcs – On Demand Compose Service generate repos (signed) of pre-release content for inclusion when building aggregate content(like: ostree, etc)

Multi-Arch Container Layered Image Build System

In this talk Adam Miller covered various topics like differences between base and layered container image. In Fedora, base image gets built by Fedora releng and layered image via OpenShift Build Service (OSBS). Currently, container image gets built only for x86_64 architecture. There is a new multi-arch build-system design in progress, which will have OSBS workers for multiple arches. Multi-arch images will further be available in registry which can be easily accessed by users.

New Container Technologies

Another nice talk from Dan Walsh on containers with the idea that “a container should be as generic as pdf ”. He introduced various tools being developed to achieve building generic container images. Some of the tools are:

skopeo – various operations on container images and image repositories

Buildah – to create image without docker file. Has

cri- o – A daemon to ensure that kubernetes doesn’t break by providing end to end test. Later also integrated with openshift test suite

Kpod – alternative of docker-cli

Automate Building Custom Atomic Host with Ansible

In this talk, Trishna Guha explained how to build your own custom OSTree and rebase an Atomic Host system with built custom OSTree. First approach involved doing all steps manually which is really tedious work. Later she demonstrated power of Ansible by adding steps involved in ansible playbook. I love ansible and its power!

Workshops

Alternative Arches debugging and fixing

This session was organized by Dan Horák and me. During this session, Dan talked about common architectures specific issues which may occur like data endianess, usage of signed/unsigned char, etc. He also talked about various resources and links available for people to help with debugging non x86_64 specific issues. One can get access to a non x86_64 machine available at Fedora wiki. Further talked about recent work started towards CI to track changes in upstream by regularly building them on required arches.

Later, I did a short walk through on an issues which I am debugging from quite sometime. This issue involves storage configuration error during anaconda install while building Atomic CloudImage locally on armhfp. It involves looking into Python code for error, followed by C Python binding code where actual problem may lie. This example was chosen to show how deep down an arch specific problem can lie and how we should step in to debug them patiently.

We further planned to work on fixing arch-specific issues which attendees might have in their packages but there were none from available attendees. Interested folks can look into slides and notes on debugging issue example and can talk to us later on IRC/ML.

Atomic Host 101

This session was taken by Dusty mabe which started with introduction on Atomic Host and followed by hands-on. Dusty did great job in distributing workshop’s prerequisites (Fedora Atomic vagrant image and local ostree repo) in advance. During the workshop, we did the following tasks which is nicely written in series of blogpost by Dusty:

I got a better understanding of Atomic Host from from this workshop. Initially faced some problems related to storage expansion of Atomic Host in vm, which got fixed with the help of Dusty.

Fedora Atomic Doc Work

This session was organized by Josh Berkus and Trishna Guha. Being interested and involved in Atomic Project, I wanted to attend this session in order to help with documentation as well. Josh and Trishna gave an overview of how these docs are organized and how to build and start adding content here. Atomic Docs content are written in AsciiDoc and uses AsciiBinder to build and maintain documentation. Firstly, I did initial setup to build the Atomic Host doc repo locally and then picked up an issue from list which was about OSTree Compose. This first requires understanding of how OSTree compose is done, trying out local steps and then write the doc. Due to the nature of the topic, I promised Josh to work on it properly after Flock. At the end of the workshop, got a hot and spicy prize from Josh (thanks!)

Let’s create a module

This session was taken by Tomáš Tomeček on creating a module. During this session he took us through content of modulemd files. Modulemd is a yaml file which has various fields defined from the list specified here . To build your own module locally, write a modulemd spec file and then run mbs-build local. This seems very simple but it takes time to do initial setup and getting successful build done.

Wrap-up session

During last day of the conference, various attendees shared their experience on what they learnt or got done during last 3 days. Speakers talked briefly on how their session was received by attendees. This session was nice but I would prefer having a wrap-up session at the end of each day of conference rather than on last day.

What else?

Other than attending various sessions, I also took opportunity to talk with some of the people regarding problems I came across on multi-arch:

Talked with Adam Miller regarding status of building layered images on multi-arches. Layered images get build using OSBS which currently supports x86_64. Thanks to Adam on continuing his work to support building images for other arches as well.

Also, discussed with Adam Miller about possibilities on adding non x86_64 arches container images in Fedora registry. Right now, only x86_64 is possible. We had a short discussion along with Randy Barlow and it seems that it should be possible after adding a manifest file. I will be looking into video provided by Randy on scaled container registry and will work with him to make Fedora container registry mult-arch aware.

User Feedback on Modularity : I also went to Modularity feedback session to see what’s going on here. I previously gave it a try when Boltron – Modular server preview release occurred. I was more interested in terms of getting it working on multi-arches. Discussed issues I came across while while trying out on ppc64le:

Fedora 26-modular iso boots and starts anaconda installer in text mode. Didn’t see a way to start in graphical mode.

Fedora 26-modular iso is not able to fetch nearest mirror during anconda installation. Even proving manual repo path, doesn’t seem to work.

Modularity team took these feedback positively and I hope that these issues will get addressed in upcoming release.

Also, I asked for possibility of getting Modular Fedora container image built for multi-arches to try out. Right now, it’s not possible because it gets built using osbs (multi-arch build support is in progress). Good thing is Tomáš Tomeček volunteered to help me with building container image locally. He will first try out on x86_64 and will share a blogpost on same.

I am looking forward to spend more time on Fedora-modular on multi-arch.

There were many more interesting sessions but I couldn’t attend due to multiple sessions in parallel. Waiting for videos from talks and workshops to be uploaded in order to watch some of them which I missed.

I fully enjoyed Flock this year – from attending sessions to meeting Fedora friends to evening Flock events to winning lot of goodies at Wackenhammer’s Clockwork Arcade and Carousel 😉 Thanks to Brian Exelbierd, rest of the organizers, volunteers and sponsors for making Flock awesome. Also, big thanks to my employer Red Hat for sponsoring my trip!

It was nice to meet you all in person, now it’s time to go back and continue working on things on fire until we meet next time 🙂

conf.kde.in 2017 was held in the big and beautiful campus of IIT, Guwahati in Assam. During 10th to 12th March, the conference schedule was 2 days of talks followed by a day of workshop. Talks were lined-up in single track which helps attendees not to miss any talk. Conference pictures from my camera are available at flickr.

1st Day

The first day started with inaugural ceremony where college professors and Valorie lightened up candle to start the conference.

Later, Valorie Zimmerman gave a keynote on Your Superpower. This talk was to motivate everyone to believe in themselves because each one of us have got superpower. To do something, it is very important to first believe in yourself.

Further, Shantanu gave an introductory talk on Qt and QML and showed some live demo explaining how easily UI can be created using QML. This talk was one of the important base for 3rd day workshop.

Bhushan gave talk on different KDE projects where one can contribute like KDevelop, Plasma, Krita, Kstars, Calligra, etc. He also provided some important information useful for beginners like how to get a KDE project’s source code, joining project related mailing lists and asking questions on respective IRC channel on freenode. Also talked about junior bugs associated with project – an easy way to start contributing to a project.

First day ended with Pradeepto’s talk of his 11 years experience with KDE and how he made so many friends across different parts of world. I feel that this is one of the best part of any conference, we meet friends with whom we work remotely and also make some new ones.

2nd Day

The 2nd day started with my talk on how I use KDE software to survive. I started using KDE desktop as my primary desktop since I was in college in around 2009. I strongly believe that to start with contribution to any software, it is very important to first use it and understand it. This gives new contributors a better idea where she can start contributing.

In my talk I discussed some KDE software which I use everyday for my personal as well as professional work. Slides for my talk are available at github.

Photo Credit – Srijan Agarwal

I liked Shantanu’s talk on using GammaRay to debug QtQuick applications. He showed how he uses GammaRay to debug his office project called SoStronk – desktop application written in Qt and QML.

Another interesting and amazing talk was given by Aditya Mehra on Mycroft integration with KDE in the form of a plasmoid. Mycroft is an open source voice assistant application which can run anywhere – on a desktop computer, inside an automobile, Raspberry Pi and so on. One can view a pre-recorded video available on YouTube and yes if you don’t like the voice, you can add your own custom voice.

There were other several interesting talks on topics like GCompris, GSoC 2017 and how one can participate, Journey of SuperX – Linux based OS + KDE software started in Assam, India.

Workshop

Most of the attendees were college students and it was important to give them some hands-on experience to help them to start with contributing to Open Source. Ashish Madeti started with explaining importance of git and how create a project with git version control setup, doing commits and other basic stuff. Attendees were trying in parallel on their laptop and we helped attendees individually to make sure they are able to do it themselves.

Later, Shantanu Tushar and Tony Thomas started with creating basic UI project using QML in Qt Creator. They explained how to browse documentation in Qt Creator for available components. Attendees tried on their own laptop and we all helped them to solve problems that they were facing.

There were many other interesting things discussed during the conference which is hard to cover in a single blogpost.

A big thanks to all volunteers who helped from start of the conference till end. Special thanks to Bhushan Shah for organizing it and KDE eV for sponsoring my travel.

With each conference, we get some awesome KDE contributors and hoping the same this year!

Flock is the annual Fedora conference where you can find Fedora contributors as the main audience. This year the conference was held at the beautiful city Kraków, Poland from 2nd to 5th August. Being a schedule of 4 days, it was split into first 2 days of talks and later on workshops. Majority of talks were enriched with various Fedora related topics.

Most of talks have been recorded and has been uploaded on YouTube. Link to recordings and slides for talk can be found at Fedora wiki.

Workshops

With my interest to have patches in Kernel, I attended workshop on Building the Fedora Kernel by Laura Abbott. During this workshop I successfully built Fedora Kernel locally in fast mode using ./scripts/fast-build.sh x86_64 kernel_srpm. Also, learned building upstream kernel with enabling/disabling desired modules during build using command make menuconfig (Need to try out!)

I am not usually a design person but still went to try out my chances in Fedora badges workshop organized by Maria Leonova and Marie Nordin 🙂 To design badges you need to have inkscape software (dnf is our friend) installed. To use Fedora specific color, copy palettes files (*.gpl) into ~/.config/inkscape/palettes/ and get one of badges templates. Now pick up new open ticket and you are ready to go. I tried working on an opened ticket which was to create a badge for “You helped get NodeJS 4 into Fedora”. So far, it seemed easy but seriously placing NodeJs logo in the right way in Fedora template was not so easy. I tried some ways and thought it’s better I stay away from it otherwise Fedora might get some ugly badges 😉

Our (I and Dodji Seketeli) talk on Ensuring ABI stability in Fedora

Our main goal to have this talk in Flock was to make more people aware of the concept of Application Binary Interface and how one can ensure that application which they are writing/maintaining are ABI compatible across various releases. Slides and recording of our talk are also available to view.

Depending upon abicheck result, status message (PASSED, FAILED or NEED_INSPECTON) with log is sent to package maintainer(s) ( whoever has subscribed) for review. This is already running in production which you can view anytime.

Other than abicheck task run, libabigail provides tools which can be used by package maintainers (fedabipkgdiff, abipkgdiff) and developers (abidif, abipkgdiff) during development phase to avoid releasing ABI incompatible applications.

Verifying ABI changes log with live example taken from abicheck task run on gpgme package.

Various future improvements in our tooling like reducing memory consumption during ABI check run, extending ABI check run to all koji packages(right now runs only on packages mentioned in critpath), running ABI checks in rawhide on two distinct packages.

Talk was well taken by attendees and they had various curious questions (which have been recorded in our talk video).

During this conference, We managed to talk to some taskotron maintainers (Tim Flink and Kamil Páral) and got their feedback on existing status of abicheck task run. They seem pretty ok with its current status. We also discussed on following future works which needs to be done to improve ABI checking experience in Fedora:

Running abicheck task on all koji packages – We are already running ABI checks on important userspace packages with few exceptions due to memory constraints (kdelibs, firefox, thunderbird). Existing runs are stable now and it is time to extend to run on all packages and we all agreed in favor of. A task has already been created on phabricator which will get done soon.

Compare abicheck on two distinct builds in rawhide update – Currently, when abicheck run on rawhide packages, it ends up comparing between same nvr which is not very useful. This is because there is no tags like update-testing which we have in Fedora branches. In rawhide, latest build become the greatest. We thought of multiple solutions to fix it but for now we agreed to go on easily doable solution. We will compare latest build in rawhide with second immediate latest one. More details is getting tracked on phabriactor.

Run abicheck task only if package has Shared library – Right now abicheck task is only relevant if run on C/C++ shared libraries. Lot of packages in Fedora are non c/C++ and without shared libraries. So, it doesn’t make sense to waste resources by running on all packages. We have a task created in phabricator which will look into rpm package content first and look for shared libraries. Regex which we will use to find out shared libraries files are \.so[0-9.]*$’. If a package has at least one shared library then only perform abicheck run on it.

Overall, the conference was productive to me both technical and community wise. I met a lot of people in person to whom I have only talked over IRC channel/mailing lists. Also met some new people from the community. Thanks to all the organizers who did a great job with the organization. Everything was so great including venue, arrangements and evening events (sadly I couldn’t attend walking tour to city). I captured some pictures during my Flock trip which can be found at flickr.

As a fresh start of 2016, I got a chance to be part of Devconf – an annual conference which takes place in the beautiful Brno city of Czech Republic. From past three years, its been happening in February month’s first Friday to Sunday and hence this year it was from 5th to 7th February.

This conference attracts not only developers but also Testers, System Administrators, Product Security groups, Packagers, DevOps, and many more from different technologies and communities e.g. OpenShift, OpenStack, Container, SELinux, Fedora, Gluster, Kernel , JBoss, etc. If you don’t believe me, check out this year’s Devconf schedule yourself 🙂 I am sure that after looking into the schedule, you want to see interesting recorded talk’s videos. No worries, Devconf organizers and volunteers did amazing job in uploading videos quickly on youtube. You can also find couple of photos taken by me during conference on flickr.

In this blog, instead of going into any kind of technical details of a talk, I will be doing a small walk-through of the conference from my perspective. In case you are looking for technical details, I recommend to look for schedule and recorded talks 🙂

At the beginning of conference, every participant was welcomed with a conference schedule booklet and pen! It was very handy to have the schedule in hand during conference. Later on, Radek Vokál welcomed everyone to enjoy this year conference and insisted to be at conference till the end to win some interesting prizes 😉

The conference began with two parallel keynotes among which I went for Tim Burke ‘s talk on Rock Star Recipe . He was previously a programmer and now vice president for Software Engineering at Red Hat. With his own experience, in 10 slides he explained beautifully how an engineer or a normal person can become a rock star. I am sure, everyone wants to be a rockstar. So, don’t forget to watch his talk 😀

In chilly Czech weather, I felt that Containers were the hottest topic of discussion for this year’s Devconf. Very first day, talks in the main conference room were either directly about containers or integration with containers. To be honest, with my limited working experience with container technology I really like it! To improve my knowledge about these, I mostly attended containers related talks on the first day. It’s good to see rapid growth and seriousness among people about docker containers. Lot of people are either trying or already running their applications in containers. Since there is discussion of containers, it is also good to keep track of project atomic – Create, deploy and manage containerized applications on a proven and trusted platform.

I love to know and learn about different Open Source projects, their communities and most important interacting with people. So, I spent the rest of the conference attending workshops, talks on Networking tools, POWER, QML, Product Security and Fedora community. Among lot of workshops, I managed to attend only two – Advanced packaging by Miroslav Suchý and Creating Automated Jobs to Run Against Fedora by Tim Flink. Packaging workshop improved my packaging skills and I hope to (c0)maintain some more packages. My love towards Libabigail project drew me to Tim Flink’s workshop. I wanted to understand and later implement a Taskotron task which triggers ABI checks when a package is pushed for update in bodhi. I managed to understand some bits and soon will work on it!

Other than talks, there were multiple fascinating booths outside the main conference hall. Some of booths were about Red Hat, RDO, OpenShift, Foreman, Project Atomic, Fedora. I loved going to every booth and interacting with them to understand what’s new happening there. I also got awesome goodies from them (thanks for that!).

If you are interested in knowing precise information (data taken from Devconf site), there were total 3 Keynotes, 203 talks + workshops and 22 lightning talks :O Other than that, one organized city tour (which I missed) and one networking party at Starobrno brewery pub. I must say the conference was rich with variety of talks. There were 8 parallel tracks running for 3 days comprising around 1600 attendees. To keep everyone alive during conference, there were even sponsored beverages and food! And to manage everything, there were 110 awesome volunteers (Kudos to all of them!).

Thanks to all volunteers, organizers, sponsors, speakers, etc for this awesome Devconf. I hope to see you all again in next Devconf 😀

Cheers!

One of the popular Fedora conference called FUDCon which recently happened in beautiful campus of MIT College of Enginnering Pune. FUDCon stands for Fedora Users and Developers Conference and organized in different regions of world. After 2011, once again FUDCon APAC was organized in Pune from 27th to 29th June. I couldn’t attend FUDCon 2011 because I wasn’t involved in Fedora in any ways and sadly never came to know about it from any of my friends. Around 3 years back, when I heard about FUDCon, I decided that I will definitely go to this conference whenever and wherever it happens in India. In early months of 2015, I was thrilled when heard about FUDCon, Pune announcement. I also submitted a talk on ABI Compatibility with positive hope of getting it accepted (Yes! it got accepted as well 🙂 . Talk selection committee did very good job in selecting talks and putting them in a very well organized schedule

Day1

It started with very early reaching to MITCoE around 8:30am. We soon rushed to main Auditorium to attend first day keynote by Dennis Gilmore on Delivering Fedora for everything and everyone. In his keynote, he talked about upcoming changes in future Fedora releases. I was surprised when I saw his last slide where it was written ausil. Reason of getting surprised was that, I have seen this name at lot of places in section “built by” in koji web interface while browsing through packages. It was good to see ausil talking on stage upfront. Keynote was followed by traditional lamp lightning by MITCoE professors and Amit Shah.

Later, I rushed to the seminar room where I was supposed to give a talk on ABI Compatibility I kept my talks simple, basic and easy so that even students can understand as well. I started with API and how API changes in an application can affect all API consumers by demonstrating API change in C printf() function. Further, talked about how ABI of an application may change and can lead to wrong results or crashes in application. Also discussed how you can make use of tools like readelf, objdump, abidiff, abicompat to do ABI analysis on C and C++ binaries. Audience were interested in knowing if we can use these tools on application from other programming languages as well but sadly answer is No. Talk ended with showing demo about how Libabigail‘s abidiff tool detects ABI changes between two versions of a library. Talk was well accepted by attendees.

Next talk was presented by Samikshan Bairagya which was about ABI changes in Kernel. He talked about advantages and limitation of genkysyms tool which is currently being used in kernel for ABI checks. Later, he introduced us to new tool called Spartakus on which he is currently working on. Spartakus aims to solve limitations of genkysyms. He also welcomed new interested contributors to Spartkus.

After the talk, I had a brief talk with Suchakra who other than contributing to Fedora does research and study in areas like profiling, debugging, OS and other low level stuff which interests me as well. I planned to attend his talks and workshop which was schedule on Day 2.

Outside conference hall, there was Fedora booth as well from where we all attendees picked awesome Fedora swags like stickers, DVDs, badges. It was also a great place for different people to interact with each other and talk and ask for help if needed.

Day 2

Day2 started with keynote by Jiri Eishchmann on current status and upcoming features in Fedora workstation. Everyone was thrilled when Jiri told in his talk that MP3 patent is going to expire soon and we can use it for free to play mp3 media! Further, I attended Suchakra’s morning talk on different tracing tools like LTTng, SystemTap, Dtrace which went very well. I also attended workshop on Kernel module development where I learned creating your own network packet filtering kernel module. Sadly, module didn’t compiled on my machine because of mismatch of kernel sub-packages versions. Error got fixed next day when I updated my whole system with new kernel sub-pacakges versions.

After end of Day 2 conference, all volunteers and speakers gathered for FUDPub in Blue O. It was way awesome than I thought, free drinks, free games and Fedora friends ! Most of the time I spent doing bowling because it was unlimited 😀 Next day, I got reward of doing so much bowling by getting pain in hand 😛

Day 3

I attended introductory Docker workshop in morning which was lead by Lalatendu and Aditya. They did very well set-up for distributing Fedora vm with docker images already available in it. This avoided hassle of waiting for college internet for downloading on demand. Whole session was hands-on and that’s why I liked it very much. Further session was on Kubernetes which I attended partly and then moved to AskFedora UX/UI hackfest. I didn’t actually hack on anything related to UI/UX there rather was listening and noticing to what improvements they made and planning to do in AskFedora web interface.

Day3 ended up with closing ceremony where Rupali expressed her thanks on behalf of all Fedora community to each group of attendees. I was amazed to see the enthusiasm of organizers and volunteers throughput the conference. Both of them did a great job in making this FUDCon a grand success. I would personally like to thank Fedora for approving my travel sponsorship request and providing a great stay in Pune. Few pictures which I captured is available on flickr . Will update with FUDCon talks videos link once it is available.

In one sentence, “Another great conference” for me! Looking forward to be part of upcoming Fedora events and conferences.